Hakan Aysal, 40, was told Tuesday that he must serve at least 30 years before he can be considered for release by judges at Fethiye High Criminal Court, southern Turkey.
A man will serve at least 30 years in jail after pushing his wife off a cliff.
A report by Dailymail revealed that the man pushed his heavily pregnant wife to her death from a cliff so he could collect a life insurance policy.
Hakan Aysal, 40, was told Tuesday that he must serve at least 30 years before he can be considered for release by judges at Fethiye High Criminal Court, southern Turkey.
The court had previously heard that Aysal pushed wife Semra, 32, off a 1,000ft cliff in Butterfly Valley, a beauty spot around 10 miles south of Fethiye, in June 2018.
Another witness, Recep Sahin, whose daughter captured Serma's final moments on the clifftop before she died, also took the stand.
He told the court that he had stopped at the beauty spot 'to see the view of Kabak Bay with my family.'
'My daughter was filming the view with my phone and the Aysal couple came down the slope at that moment.
'We even joked: "Either this man will throw the woman off or the woman will throw the man."'
The witnesses both added that the defendant appeared very calm in the moments after the incident while emergency services were on the scene.
On the day of Semra's death, another witness captured the moment her husband appeared to be almost dragging her over to the edge of the cliff.
But nobody captured the moment Serma actually fell. Prosecutors say this is because Aysal insisted the couple stay on the clifftop for three hours until he could be sure they were not being watched.
In February, the court heard from the victim's brother, Naim Yolcu, in a video interview.
'When we went to the Forensic Medicine Institute to get the body, Hakan was sitting in the car. My family and I were destroyed, but Hakan did not even appear sad,' he said, adding that he did not see Aysal cry.
'My sister was always against taking out loans. However, after she died, we learned that she had three loans taken by Hakan on behalf of my sister.
'Also, Semra had a fear of heights, what extreme sport is she going to be doing when she is scared of heights?,' Yolcu said.
Local news outlet NTV reported that bank statements requested by the court showed that Aysal had taken out seven loans on Semra's behalf.
Asked previously about the insurance premiums, Aysal said: 'I have been interested in extreme sports since 2014; Parachuting, bungee jumping, rafting. That is why I had life insurance before I got married.'
'I did not examine the policy much,' Aysal said when asked about an article in the personal accident insurance that named him as the sole benefactor in the case of Semra's death and his family as the benefactors should they both die.
'The banker arranged the paperwork. I just brought it to my wife to get it signed. I was not aware that there was such an article,' he said.
Aysal had denied responsibility for Semra's death, he explained her fall by saying: 'After taking a photo, my wife put her phone in her bag. Later, she asked me to give her the phone.
' I got up and then I heard my wife scream behind my when I walked a few steps away to get the bag. When I turned back, she was not there. I did not push my wife.'